An Arizona woman has been charged with stalking a man, sending him a total of 65,000 text messages and breaking into his home to take a bath after going out with him just once.

Jacqueline Ades, 31, was arrested in Phoenix on Tuesday on felony charges of threatening and intimidating, stalking and harassment, a misdemeanor.

Ades reportedly met the unnamed Paradise Valley resident through a dating site in 2017.

Not-quite fatal attraction: Jacqueline Ades, 31 (pictured left and right in mugshots) is accused of stalking a man, sending him a total of 65,000 text messages and breaking into his home to take a bath

Cupid's arrow: The victim told police he had gone out with Ades just once after meeting her through a dating site, but she apparently fell in love with him

The two went out together on a single date, but Ades allegedly fell in love and began actively pursuing the man.

The victim said Ades, who described herself on social media as a makeup artist, inundated his phone with text messages, sometimes sending as many as 500 a day, reported ABC15.

Ades' love interest contacted police twice last year after she parked outside his home and continued peppering him with unwanted texts. Police responded to the area and escorted Ades off his property.

Last month, the victim spotted her while remotely checking home surveillance video. Officers went to the home and found the 31-year-old woman taking a bath in the man's tub.

Not playing hard to get: Ades (left and right) )allegedly inundated her love interest with text messages, sometimes sending as many as 500 a day

Dark turn: After Ades was caught by police taking a bath in the man's home while he was away, she allegedly began sending the object of her desire threatening texts

Chilling words: In one missive, Ades allegedly compared herself to Adolf Hitler and called the homicidal Nazi leader a 'genius'

When police searched Ades' car, they found a large butcher knife on the passenger seat.

The victim said after that incident, Ades sent him threatening texts, one of which stated: 'Oh what would I do w ur blood! Id wanna bathe in it.'

Another menacing missive read: 'You do whatever you have to do to get here… but don’t ever try to leave me... I’ll kill you... I don’t want to be a murderer.'

In her messages to the object of her desire, Ades allegedly favorably compared herself to Adolf Hitler and praised the Nazi mass murderer as a 'genius,' as Fox 10 reported.

Then last week, Ades showed up at the victim’s business in Scottsdale and falsely claimed to be his wife, which ultimately led to her arrest in Phoenix, according to police.

After being taken into custody, Ades reassured police that she had no intention of hurting the man, saying that she only sent the threatening texts to him because she loved him and feared that he would leave her.

Ades later acknowledged that her statements were 'crazy.' She was ordered held without bond.