They didn't hear the gunshot.
But when Tina Westmoreland went to water the plants in the front yard of her home in Quinlan, Texas, on Sunday morning, she found her daughter's diabetic alert dog laying there.
The 39-year-old mother of four had just made pancakes for the kids and was unsure how the 4-year-old golden retriever got outside. She immediately called the vet but didn't see the puddle of blood until her father lifted the dog into the car.
They rushed the dog, named Journey, to an animal hospital where he died from the gunshot wound. The family is devastated.
"It's been awful for us all," Westmoreland, a fourth-grade math teacher, told ABC News in an interview Tuesday.
Journey was trained to detect high or low levels of blood sugar in Westmoreland's 15-year-old daughter Hannah, who was diagnosed with diabetes in 2012.
"He was amazing," Westmoreland said of the dog. "He would poke her with his nose on her leg. He got in front of her, made sure she stopped and listened to him."
(MORE: Suspect kills police dog in shootout outside mall on Christmas Eve, police say)Journey had been with the family for the past three years and went everywhere with Hannah: to school, church and even camp.
"She is struggling, but hanging in there," Westmoreland told ABC News. "She has an amazing support system."
He was amazing ... He would poke her with his nose on her leg. He got in front of her, made sure she stopped and listened to him.
Westmoreland said she reported the incident to the Hunt County Sheriff's Office, and then a game warden contacted her Monday night to tell her he was investigating.
The sheriff's office told ABC News it has opened an animal cruelty investigation into Journey's shooting.
A spokesperson for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department confirmed that a Hunt County game warden is assisting with the probe.