He never told her that the syrup she loved—the one that tasted like her young husband’s shy smile, like the autumn they eloped, like the hope she carried before the miscarriage—was not maple. Not real. Not even particularly natural. It was a ghost of a ghost: a high-fructose backbone smoothed by a lab-made molecule designed to make you forget you are eating industrial sediment.

Elias, a flavor chemist with forty years in the industry, knew it by heart. He’d formulated that precise ratio of cane to corn back in ’87—a tiny tweak to lower costs without killing the "purity" illusion. Tonight, the printed ingredients on the plastic bottle blur in his trembling hand.

And yet.

He never told her.

He finally understands.

Every Sunday for thirty years, Elias drove her to the same booth by the window. She’d pour a perfect gold curl of that syrup, watch it seep into the griddle cracks, and whisper, "That’s the taste of when your father still looked at me." Elias never understood. His father, a taciturn machinist, had died when Elias was twelve. Ruth never remarried. She just drove forty miles every Sunday for syrup that tasted like the past.