It was a Super Bowl game night. The San Francisco 49ers and the Baltimore Ravens were playing as me and my family watched. The sound of popcorn popping in the kitchen and the smell of biscuits in the oven was all around the house. Later on that evening, I felt that there was something wrong, so I tiptoed away from the living room to go look for my dog, and when I found her, she was breathing really hard as if she had ran a marathon. A few seconds later, I came to my senses and realized that she was giving birth, Lexie had six puppies. The runt of the litter was my favorite, she was completely white with little brown spots on her tail. Seeing that she was white and delicate, Tiffany and I decided to name her Snowflake.
We treated …show more content…
Her eyes were the sweetest brown. I fell for Snowflake, and I wanted her to strive for her life. As I watched Snowflake crawl away to the cold hard floor, my body shriveled with goosebumps. I later on went back to the screaming of my dad to the refs in the game, in the living room. The savory flavor of buttered popcorn cleared my mind on Snowflake. While I watched the Baltimore Ravens take the win we all cheered and everything else just faded away.
When I saw my mom get up slowly then quickly walk to the small room I wondered what was going on, but nothing bad came to mind. While my dad happily named the first pup Baltimore Raven Zapata, after the football team, I went to my room and layed on my bed as my body sunk into the comfort of my pillows and blankets. As I dozed off, I could hear the cheering of fans on the T.V. and that little shut eye felt like I slept a whole three hours.
When I finally got up I walked to the same spot where Snowflake would lay on the cold hard floor, and she wasn’t there. I started to search every inch of the house and she was nowhere to be found. I walked up to my mom and asked if she had seen Snowflake, and she just had a long stare. I knew, without words coming out of her mouth, what happened to Snowflake. So I just stared right back into her eyes, in