The woman whose body was found Tuesday stuffed into a large red suitcase dumped on the roadside in an affluent Connecticut town reportedly told her mom just before vanishing that she was afraid “someone” was going to “murder" her.

Valerie Reyes, 24, of New Rochelle, N.Y., was identified this week as the person whose body was bound at the hands and feet, jammed into the piece of luggage and then abandoned in upscale Greenwich, Conn. Highway workers stumbled upon Reyes’ remains after discovering the suitcase sitting about 10-15 feet from Glenville Road in the wealthy enclave, police said.

Reyes' mother, Norma Sanchez, said her daughter -- who reportedly battled depression and anxiety -- became paranoid shortly before disappearing. She was last seen Jan. 29 and reported missing the next day.

NEW YORK WOMAN, 24, ID'D AS DEAD FEMALE BOUND AND STUFFED INTO RED SUITCASE FOUND IN WEALTHY CONNECTICUT TOWN

“She was very scared, very frightened,” Sanchez told the Rockland/Westchester Journal News. “She didn’t mention anything or no one specific. She just said, ‘I’m scared. I’m paranoid, mommy. I’m getting anxiety attacks.’ She was having a hard time talking.”

Sanchez tried to elicit more details from her daughter but came up empty.

“I asked about her ex-boyfriend. And she said, ‘No,’” Sanchez said, noting the pair had broken up Jan. 24, just days before Reyes went off the grid.

Though she reportedly never told her mom who she feared, Sanchez said Reyes was clear about what she feared, telling her mom: “’I’m afraid someone is going to murder me."

Said Sanchez: "We wonder, 'Who made her feel this way?'"

A private investigator hired by Reyes' family uncovered surveillance footage that showed the 24-year-old at a Manhattan ATM at 2 a.m. on Jan. 30, Sanchez said. It's unclear why Reyes was in New York City, if she was with anyone or where she may have gone next.

WOMAN'S BODY FOUND IN RED SUITCASE ALONGSIDE ROAD IN AFFLUENT CONNECTICUT TOWN, POLICE SAY

Reyes, who worked at a Barnes & Noble in Eastchester, N.Y, planned to train to become a tattoo artist and liked to sing, said friends who were still trying to make sense of how Reyes met her gruesome end.

"Horrified. Absolutely horrified," Lauren Bradford, 19, who worked with Reyes, told The Journal News. "I'm just like totally shocked. She was a confidant. She really encouraged me and my aspirations. She had a really bright future. She was really excited about her art and her goals."

On Thursday, friends and family held a vigil for Reyes at Glen Island Park in New Rochelle.

"There needs to be justice for my precious daughter," Sanchez said. "The people who did this need to pay."

Reyes' cause of death has not been revealed and no arrests in the case have been announced. Investigators have asked anyone with information on the case to contact 203-622-3333.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.