You lift the wooden latch and throw open the tall, narrow door, not exactly sure what you were expecting. Maybe a servant's stairs, or even a side alley exit - but whatever you were expecting, it wasn't this. You find yourself staring glumly at the contents of a poorly stocked kitchen pantry.
The walk-in pantry is just wide enough to enter, and about 6 feet deep, with two rows of shelving on the right and left. You spy some jars of honey, a few mostly-empty bags of rice flour and finely ground khaffa flakes, a single sack of sad looking potatoes with deeply sunken eyes, and a loose collection of root vegetable odds and ends in a basket. Against the back of the pantry stands a large brining barrel for storing fish or poultry.
Not the best hiding spot, you admit. But, any port in a storm, as your gran would say. You dive inside and close the door, hearing the latch click shut behind you. Your only light is a silver thread of lamplight sneaking like a thief through a small crack between the door and its frame to your hiding place. Pushing yourself into the farthest corner recess of the larder behind the brining barrel, willing yourself to somehow become smaller and unnoticeable, the faint salty scent of vinegar hits your nose, like the mere wisp of a memory of the sea, half-forgotten, and clouded with time. Suddenly, even that meagre light is extinguished as the pantry is thrown into darkness. A shape, a figure, a shadow of a person is occluding the firelight, positioning itself directly in front of the tall, thin door.
It laughs.
Your heart dies inside your chest and every hair on your body prickles. What in Goddess' name ever made you think this would be a good idea? Your hands begin scrabbling at the walls around you in a blind panic, trying to find something - anything useful - a weapon, a magic ward, anything. And then, a miracle occurs. Your fingers do find something. A small loop of fabric, at ground level, in the back corner behind the pickling barrel. It feels like the string of a yo-yo, or the tag on the back of a shirt that's all fancy-like.
The thing at the door begins to hum a jaunty little nameless tune, and you hear the unmistakable sound of a wooden latch being lifted. Sending a prayer to whatever Gods or Goddesses might be listening, you pull the loop and feel the wall behind you suddenly recess backwards on silent hinges, sliding off to one side. Having thoroughly wedged yourself into the back corner, you practically fall over yourself in a backwards somersault. The thing at the door growls and sniffs the air. Deep, raspy, and gutteral, like a wildcat defending a recent kill.
That specific sound seems to awaken some sort of primordial instinct in your body. You kick with your legs, pistoning your feet, shoving your body backwards through the opened doorway and into the secret passage beyond through sheer brute force alone. The last image you see as the wall slides itself back into place in front of you on silent counterweights, is the pantry door beginning to open, and the low animal growl suddenly turning into a hiss of disappointment.
You freeze, motionless, staring at the blank featureless back of the pantry wall, afraid to make any sound at all. Afraid to even breathe. There is a moment when the only sounds you can hear are the pounding of blood in your own ears and the shriek of the wind howling down the alley outside the tavern. And then the moment passes, and you hear the larder door snick shut again as the smiling man lets out an audible snort of frustration.
You allow yourself to draw a single, shaky breath.
What do you do?
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