The chilling message, obtained by TMZ, shows Dominic Russo, 20, gently telling his then-girlfriend that they needed time apart.

“Kenzie u know i love u but i don’t think we should be together at this point there isnt very much time on earth yaknow,” he wrote in the message, which Shirilla read on June 2, 2022 — a month before she intentionally crashed her Toyota Camry into a brick wall at 100 mph, killing Russo and their friend Davion Flanagan, 19, in Strongsville, Ohio.

“I dont want u to think im abandoning u i wish it could work but i don’t think its going to at this point especially with the threats,” he continued.

“We should just breakup so we can both find happiness somewhere else.”

Shirilla, now 21, is serving two concurrent sentences of 15 years to life. She is appealing her conviction for the second time.

Her story is the subject of the hit Netflix documentary “The Crash,” which has risen to No. 1 since its release.

The then-19-year-old killed Russo after their relationship ended.

“She had a mission, and she executed it with precision. The decision was death,” Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Judge Nancy Margaret Russo said in 2023.

After the murders, Shirilla posted loving messages on Russo’s online obituary — even though evidence showed she made no attempt to brake before the fatal crash.

“I miss you nug. I still feel like your just going to walk in the door any second. I miss your laugh your perfect smile. I feel your energy around me everyday i just wish it was physical,” one post written on Aug. 24, 2022, under her name read.

“God u are the last person to deserve this you had such a perfect life ahead of you… i wish i told you all this more. Please wait for me.”

Shirilla was arrested four months after the crash.

She had texted Russo’s mother, Christine, after his death, claiming she blacked out and had no memory of what happened.

“I remember turning onto the street, and then my vision fades to black,” Shirilla wrote, according to court documents.

“It really kills me not to be able to remember anything. I promise you I would tell you. I’ve been asking my therapist why I don’t remember, and she said it’s because of trauma. I’m gonna try to get myself hypnotized and make myself remember.”

Meanwhile, former inmates have spoken about Shirilla’s life behind bars at the Ohio Reformatory for Women — including that her nickname was “Shirilla the Killa.”

Another inmate described her as the Regina George of prison, always perfectly put together with makeup and hair done.

“When I was in there with her, you’d look at her and she had her makeup done every day, she was very well put together — almost like preppy,” Mary Katherine Crowder, who served about six months alongside Shirilla, told The Post.