"Windsor!" Billy cried, coughing dirt and reinforced concrete dust from his lungs, "Stand and face me."
"No."
"I'm here for the gold."
Edwin sighed. He said, "Then you should brace for disappointment. There is no gold here."
"You can't hide it from me," snarled Billy, as he used the full range of his vision to scan his surroundings.
"I'm not trying."
"Your briefcase! I can't see through it, it must be filled with gold."
"I told you," said Edwin, "There is no gold here."
"Give me the briefcase."
"You don't really want it," Edwin said, trying to be reasonable.
"Yes, I do. And if you don't give it to me I will kill you and take it anyway. Haven't you heard? I'm a villain now."
"Excelsior, if you strike me down you will still be an idiot."
"Billy! My name is Billy!"
"A rose by any other name would still be more cunning than you."
Excelsior slammed his foot into the floor so hard, most of the lights broke and chips of concrete rained down from the ceiling of the reinforced room. "I can make this your grave Windsor."
"Oh, very well. If you want my "treasure”—the gold at the bottom of the dungeon, the destructive serum at the heart of the mad scientist's lair, whatever foolishness you imagine this to be," he nudged the briefcase, "then take it."
Billy walked across the room. Their eyes locked, as he bent down very slowly and reached for the case. Edwin held his gaze calmly. Even though Billy's face was mere inches away from Windsor's, Edwin did not blink or flinch.
Case in hand, Billy stood up and took a step backward. Even though he could see no way that Edwin Windsor could have possibly been a physical threat to him, a feeling of relief flooded through him.
"I thought so, you ain’t got nothing!"
Edwin smiled at the double negative. Or perhaps he winced in pain. It was difficult to tell in the flickering, uncertain light.
Billy raised himself to his full height and made his pronouncement, "I will let you live, Windsor. Even as a villain, I'm a better man than you."
Edwin covered his eyes and waved Billy away. "Please forgive me if I don't show you out."
Billy left the room carrying his prize and feeling triumphant. But when the door to the command center shut behind him, curiosity got the best of him. What was in the case, anyway? He knew it was incredibly dense. He knew that he couldn't see through it. That made it either lead or gold. There certainly was nothing like it buried in the earth around him. Had he just stolen a briefcase full of lead? Better check, just to be sure Windsor wasn't pulling anything.
He put the case on a table and looked at it. It looked expensive. It was, in fact, the most expensive briefcase known to man. And that was before one took into account the contents. Underneath the expensive, hand-stitched leather was an expensive magnetic containment unit known as a Penning Trap. The irony of a trap that was actually a trap had not been lost on Edwin.
Inside the Penning Trap's swirling magnetic field was the most expensive substance known to man, an entire gram of anti-hydrogen. By NASA estimates it was worth $62.5 trillion dollars. Of course, that was absurd. To make a market, you need a buyer. $62.5 trillion was nearly five years of the Gross Domestic Product of the United States. Not the kind of money that one spent on a substance whose very nature ensured that it destroyed anything it came into contact with. Perhaps “destroyed” was the wrong word. “Destroyed” implied that struggle was possible. Antimatter simply negated the matter around it. No argument or struggle involved. It was Edwin's kind of weapon. Of course it was horrendously expensive, but when it was the only way to get the job done...
Excelsior released the clasps and the case opened on its own. Servos pushed the sides down and lifted a complex electromagnetic apparatus as if it was something to behold. In fact, it was not. It was grey, covered in wires, and looked a bit like a poorly conceived high school shop project that had gone terribly over budget. But it did have a bright red button on it that read "DANGER! OPEN."
Danger, scoffed Billy. What danger could there be to him? He was the most impervious thing he knew of. But as impervious as he was, he was still composed of matter. Very, very tough matter, but matter all the same.
For all the clever jokes that could be made here involving "mind" and "matter" there is one sure and certain variation you can take with you to the grave: "In the grand scheme of things you don't matter very much, and the laws of physics don't mind at all."
When Billy pushed the button, matter met antimatter and neither party was very happy about it.
As the first tremor reached Edwin in the command chair, he thought to himself, "And now I am dead, killed ridding the world of an unbalanced monster. A hero at the end?" This absurd pill was all the more bitter for being true. For all his struggles to be true to principle, his final realization came in the words of Shakespeare, "Men were deceivers ever. One foot in sea and one on shore. To one thing constant never." Perhaps he never really knew himself at all.
As the matter around the case was nullified, 500 Kv gamma rays irradiated the earth. On the surface, storage units buckled and rolled on a bubble of earth and light. Then they were sucked inward with sudden violence. As the roar subsided there was not even smoke. A crater filled with the irradiated detritus of storage unit junk was all that remained to mark what was surely the final resting place for Edwin Windsor and a once-innocent boy from the Midwest named Billy.