(CNN) -- Track star Oscar Pistorius took the stand for a third day Wednesday to continue telling his story of what happened on the night he fatally shot his girlfriend. His defense attorney Barry Roux asked him to pick up where he left off the previous day, when he entered the toilet and saw Reeva Steenkamp.
He watched as she struggled to breathe, he told the court in a strained voice. He tried to pick her up, but couldn't at first.
On Tuesday, the athlete sobbed in the witness stand, as he described how, gripped by fear, he shot Steenkamp dead through the locked toilet door thinking she was an intruder.
Conditioned by years of living in crime-ridden South Africa, Pistorius said the noises convinced him someone was breaking into his Pretoria home and he needed to protect himself and his girlfriend.
Pistorius said he made his way to the bathroom, pistol in hand. He braced himself against a bathroom wall as he noticed that a window was open, and became convinced that an intruder was inside his home, he said.
He testified about firing the shots and screaming for Steenkamp to call the police, until it slowly dawned on him that his girlfriend might have been the one behind the door.
"I was panicking at this point. I didn't know what to make or what to do," Pistorius recounted. "I don't think I've ever screamed like that. ... I was crying out to the Lord, I was crying out for Reeva," he said, choking back the tears.
He then recounted how he bashed out a panel of the wooden door with a cricket bat to find Steenkamp.
"I sat over Reeva and I cried," he said, before breaking down into uncontrollable sobs, causing Judge Thokozile Masipa to adjourn the hearing for the day.
'I was besotted with her'
The 27-year-old double amputee denies deliberately shooting Steenkamp on Valentine's Day last year. On his first day on the stand, on Monday, he made a tearful apology to Steenkamp's family.
The prosecution alleges Pistorius killed his girlfriend after they argued.
Several witnesses have testified to hearing a man's shouts coming from the house although they have also spoken of the terrified screams of a woman leading up to and during a volley of shots.
The trial, now in its 18th day, has gripped South Africa, and millions of sports and athletics fans around the world who saw Pistorius as a symbol of triumph over physical adversity.
His disabled lower legs were amputated as a baby, but he went on to achieve global fame as the "blade runner", winning numerous Paralympic gold medals.
Earlier, defense lawyer Barry Roux delved deeper into his relationship with Steenkamp, trying to show they had a loving relationship.
"If anything, I was more into her at times than she was with me ... I was besotted with her," Pistorius told the court in Pretoria, South Africa.
The couple met on November 4, 2012, Pistorius said, a little more than three months before Steenkamp died.
In affectionate messages read out in court, the pair used pet names like "baba" and "angel," said they missed each other and exchanged many "x"s, or kisses.
The image was a far cry from the gun-obsessed, fast-living hothead whom prosecutors sought to portray in the first three weeks of the trial.
Prosecutors have also used the same cache of messages retrieved from Pistorius' phone to reveal outbursts of temper and jealousy.
Recalling the evening
Pistorius was also asked on Tuesday about events earlier in the evening of February 13.
He said Steenkamp had offered to cook for him. Later, when they went upstairs, Pistorius opened the sliding doors on to the balcony off his bedroom because it was a humid evening and the air conditioning was not working.
He said he fell asleep between 9 and 10 p.m. and woke up later. Steenkamp then asked him if he couldn't sleep, he said -- and he got up to move the fans. He then heard the noise from the bathroom.
This was the first time he had indicated that Steenkamp was awake in the moments before the drama unfolded.
His lawyer asked for an adjournment so he could change out of his suit, allowing Pistorius to show how short he is without his prostheses on. The detail is important to his defense because he has said he feels very vulnerable without them on.
Only those in the courtroom can see Pistorius because he has chosen not to testify on camera. His testimony can be heard on an audio feed.
As he outlined his version of events, Steenkamp's mother June, who had sat steely faced throughout Pistorius' two days on the stand, leaned forward slowly and buried her head in her hands.
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