His lazy throw made the crumpled ball of parchment fall on the floor, and silently he watched, an amused look on his face, wondering how much noise she was going to make collecting it. Isaac hadn't known much about Magnolia before these last few weeks, but he was quickly learning; she was a bit of a mess. Not in the worst way, but in that sort of way that she crashed through anything in orbit, and it was never dull. He turned to stare at her again, his eyes watching as Nola scraped the ball across the floor with her shoe, and he laughed silently. The teenage wizard continued to watch her as she began to write, and he could tell she'd scratched whatever it was out, something that amused him to no end, as he turned to slink back into his chair. Part of him thought she might toss the note and call it a day if she was scribbling things out, but the thunk against his head told him differently.
Instinctively his hand went up to rub the spot where the note had hit him, not that it had hurt, and he bent over in his seat to pick it up from the floor. Uncrumpling it, he realized every time he did, it was a little bit louder. The parchment becoming stressed and crinkled beyond its own strength. He looked over at her, seeing her eyes on the board again, and then back down at the note to read it. He could barely make out what she had blacked out, and he smirked, his eyes followed the black ink down to where she'd answered him shortly, and to the little heart, she'd drawn. It was cute, but he thought it was dumb.
Folding the note up neater than he had since the beginning of this little exchange Isaac stuffed it into the pocket of his uniform slacks and turned back to his textbook and notes. For a moment, he thought he'd leave it at that since it was sort of a natural close, but after two more minutes of the professor's lecture, he grew bored again. He already knew the subject matter, not that it was difficult to grasp or anything, and he was annoyed by the dullness. Pulling a new page from his own book, he wrote another note to her. Finishing it up, he folded it, it was uneven and misshapen, but it was better than the crumpled mess he'd been throwing at her before. Turning to the witch behind the wizard next to him, he gave her a dimpled grin, whispering, "Could you?" He said, showing her the note and pointing at Magnolia, whose desk was on the other side of hers, out of Isaac's reach, but not out of hers. The witch lit up at first but then realized the note wasn't for her and shrugged, but passed it along anyway.
You give up easily.