This is probably best done using Javascript, not pure-Liquid. You generally want your pages to be as cache-able as possible for Shopify's servers to keep loading times as lean as possible.
You will want to use Liquid to compensate for timezones, however. You can get the store's configured timezone and drop that into a Javascript variable:
var timezone = {{ 1 | date: '%z' | json }};
The above liquid statement takes some arbitrary input, runs it through the date filter and outputs only the timezone component configured for that store (using '%z'), then runs that through the json
filter to ensure that whatever the output will always be javascript-legal.
Now that you know your timezone offset, you can assemble your timer logic in Javascript using all your normal date/time tricks. For example:
var now = new Date();
var nowStr = now.toISOString(); // Output format: '2019-01-01T00:00'
// Chop off the time portion, then append your desired time & store timezone
var closingTimeStr = nowStr.split('T')[0] + 'T21:00' + timezone;
// We make a new date using today's date/time string
var closingTime = new Date(closingTimeStr);
// And now we can do math based on the difference
var difference_ms = closingTime - now;
if(difference_ms > 0){
// Parse the difference into hours, minutes and seconds if a positive amount of time remains. Writing a better parsing function is left as an exercise for the reader.
var hours = parseInt(difference_ms / (60 * 60 * 1000) );
difference_ms %= (60 * 60 * 1000);
var minutes = parseInt(difference_ms / (60 * 1000) );
difference_ms %= (60 * 1000);
var seconds = parseInt(difference_ms / (1000) );
console.log('Hurry down! Closing in ' + hours + ' hours, ' + minutes + ' minutes, and ' + seconds + ' seconds!');
} else {
// Show appropriate message if we're out-of-bounds
console.log('Closed for today - try again tomorrow!');
}