(ROUGH CUT ONLY - NO REPORTER NARRATION AND CLEAR WITNESS ACCOUNT)<br/> <br />She last saw Anders Behring Breivik on the shore of Norway's Utoeya Island when he looked straight at her, raised his rifle towards her and pulled the trigger, calmly.<br/> <br />Now, 18-year-old Alexandra-Maeva Norya Peltre is about to face him in court as he stands trial for killing 77 people that summer's day.<br/> <br />The trial of anti-Islam fanatic Breivik is due to start on April 16 and Peltre is one of several called on to testify.<br/> <br />She recalls the order of the chilling events for us.<br/> <br />"I called my mum and then I told her that I love her and I hung up and I started to run because I heard some more shooting," she told Reuters as she relived the events of the July afternoon of last year during a trip to the little wooded island where Breivik killed 69 people and maimed 33 at a Labour Party summer camp for youths.<br/> <br />As she walked across the island, she pointed out the various places she had taken as hiding spots.<br/> <br />She said there was a kind of pattern. First there were screams and then there was shooting and it all seemed to go on forever.<br/> <br />Earlier that day Breivik had set off a fertiliser bomb at government headquarters in Oslo, killing eight and injuring nine.<br/> <br />Peltre was one of the last people shot on the island.<br/> <br />By the time Breivik aimed his Ruger semi-automatic rifle at Alexandra, he had prowled Utoeya island in a police uniform for almost an hour, repeatedly luring youngsters by saying he had come to save them.<br/> <br />She ran from hiding place to hiding place with a small group, shushing those who cried aloud and veering around bodies.<br/> <br />When her moment with Breivik finally came she believed most of her 563 campmates were dead and had no idea why.<br/> <br />"He pulled out his gun and I saw him right in the eyes, actually, when he pulled out the gun. He was looking right at me and then I just remember poof", she said standing at the place where she was shot.<br/> <br />She jumped into the cold Tyri Fjord, almost a kilometre from the far shore. She held her face above water, but no more bullets came her way.<br/> <br />"I had a hole in my leg and I started running to the water and then I started swimming in the water just so I could go to like a place where I had water to right over my eyes so if I was standing on my toes I could see something, but if I wasn't standing on my toes I could hide," she said.<br/> <br />Breivik surrendered to police less than 100 metres away, seemingly proud of the day's carnage.<br/> <br />An officer applied a tourniquet to Alexandra's thigh that may have saved her life.<br/> <br />Court-appointed psychiatrists have declared Breivik psychotic and a second opinion is expected on Tuesday (April 10).<br/> <br />But to Alexandra it doesn't matter what the diagnosis is.<br/> <br />"For me, that's the same, if he's insane or not, as long as he can't do the same thing that he did to some other innocent people," she said.
