Andrew grudgingly went back to the train, dragged off his trunk and Poppy's and started to drag them both around the school grounds. They reached a door and they both tried yelling their names at it. The creature looked like a porcupine on hind legs.
"Well, that's just bloody ugly," Andrew frowned as Poppy shouted her name at the door. The doors opened to her. "Well, how happy for you. You're a two legged porcupine thing," he said, "whatever that means." He started to drag her trunk towards the open door, but he found out immediately that he could not pass through the door. There was some sort of enchantment that seemed to prohibit him from helping her any further. He gave it a big shove to get it through the door.
"Good luck," he told her. She smiled at him nervously and went through the gates. Picking up his own trunk again, he moved on until he got to the next gate--a gate with a great big bird of some sort. A hawk-ish, eagle-ish thing. He shouted his name and the gate opened to him.
"Great. I'm a bird," he said to himself. He grabbed the handle of his trunk and dragged it through the gate, hoping to find a room, a stairway, some sort of dormitory--anything. What did he see? More outdoors. A courtyard. Across the courtyard was another big wooden door, but the others who were already here didn't seem to have had any luck getting the door open.
He went over to the other door--one that actually did seem to be attached to a building. He was looking for hinges, a keyhole, anything helpful. There was nothing. Heck, he didn't even see a proper latch on this door. He knocked, and it was greeted by lots more nothingness. He shouted his name at the door, and again found nothing.
Okay, so that was out. He started walking around, looking for windows, maybe something to climb on, some way of breaking in, but it wasn't looking promising.
Andrew could pick locks. He could pick pockets. He could climb just about anything he set his mind to. This was going to require some thinking. Surely he could think up a way to break in, right? And if he did, he wanted to find whatever imbecile had thought this was any sort of idea of hospitality, no matter how unrefined and crude Americans were, and try to appeal to their humanity.