He knew what a "soul" was, vaguely. It was like one's spirit, their thoughts and personality. He admitted that individual thought was rather inexplicable but he would hardly consider that magic. One's thoughts still lay in their head, their emotions in their chest, instincts in their blood. Ronan seemed more misinformed about anatomy than truly spiritual to Oluse at that point, but he could not deny that magic was in fact infesting the world around him, or at least that is how Adarin would put it. It was even infesting himself. Oluse just didn't know, he did not hate Ronan like Adarin would he knew that, but he felt as uneasy as Adarin might have. Even after everything, Oluse looked to Adarin as a real man. A step Oluse never had the chance to take.
The screech of the falcon braced him, but the bout of terror having passed he did not jump. He simply looked up with Ronan. It was a glorious sight, Syna pouring enough light down that it felt you could see straight through the creature's flesh. Oluse loves birds, how unattainable they were. He did appreciate mystery but how Ronan spoke, it seemed so scary. Magic that was a part of you, a part of the world, that you could never escape or hide from. Was everything truly so doomed?
His eyes lingered longer than Ronan's on the creature his his thoughts milled in his mind, as he passively considered the skeletal construct of the bird of prey. Finally his eyes dropped, still squinting against the sun. He stared at Ronan for a long moment, he was a mystery, more so than a simple bird. He yelled, he saves lives, he has a magnetism that drew people to him, and yet he had such strong personal beliefs. It would be so easy to speak to him if he were hurt, if he were bleeding, Oluse would know what to do. But then, right there on that peak, Ronan was an incomprehensible enigma.
"I know what a soul is..." The young man said almost indignantly. "It's just, that is just a myth, a way of looking at something we don't understand. People aren't magical. Magic is something else, it's for the gods to control and no one else. it's dangerous and it hurts people... Even when the gods use it it hurts people." He thinks of the Storm. "It isn't wonderful or good. It is destructive and it kills people, and it draws blood and degrades minds. You haven't worked with mages like I have, haven't had to strap them down while you tend to their self inflicted wounds. You haven't seen the death that magic can bring to a city." He paused a moment a looked down, his mind becoming taxed by the free speech, which he had grown inherently unaccustomed to in his line of work, where proper premeditated and precise speech was a must.
"I will accept who I am, a cast out son of Denval. Flesh, bones, blood, and the unexplainable. But, I refuse to mistake myself with magic, with a force that destroys families and ends lives. I am a physician and I will do everything within my power to refuse the temptations of power so that I may dedicate my life to healing, to helping. Anything less, to risk magic of any sort, is to risk your own sanity, and the lives of the ones you love.
I am not foolish, Ronan, and if you believe what you have said to me here, that magic is just some fact that we must accept and harness, then you are the fool." His words were muddle din places, manner inconsistent, but his conviction was steady, and growing steadier with each word. He didn't look with anger, however, but with an almost pity, or perhaps persisting weariness from the turmoil which launched them into that haphazard conversation.