A St. Louis ballerina who “transcended everybody every time she danced” has been found dead, two days after her abandoned car was discovered near a lake, officials said.

The body of Raffaella Maria Stroik, 23, was found in Mark Twain Lake in rural Monroe County around 9:40 a.m. Wednesday, according to Missouri State Highway Patrol.

At a press conference Wednesday, Sgt. Eric Brown said there were no immediate signs of foul play.

“We don’t see anything that has given us a solid direction right now,” said Brown, according to the Herald-Whig.

The dancer’s mysterious disappearance unfolded Monday, when a state park ranger found her black 2012 Volkswagen Jetta unattended in a parking lot near the lake.

A computer check showed Stroik hadn’t been reported missing.

The next morning, a Missouri state trooper checked the area again and found her car still there, prompting a missing persons report to be filed.

A pilot in a private plane who helped in the search for Stroik discovered her body in the lake.

She was last seen at a Whole Foods in the St. Louis suburb of Town and Country around 10:30 a.m. Monday.

An autopsy was expected to be completed Thursday morning.

The native of South Bend, Indiana, had performed with the St. Louis Ballet since 2017 and had starred in “Cinderella,” “The Nutcracker” and “La Vie” with the company. She was also a former company member with the American Contemporary Ballet.

“May Raffaella rest in peace. She was a beautiful soul we will all miss deeply,” the St. Louis Ballet said on its website.

In Indiana, Stroik landed the gig as the Sugar Plum Fairy in the 2012 and 2015 productions of “The Nutcracker” in Southold, the South Bend Tribune reported.

She was the daughter of Duncan Stroik, an architecture professor at the University of Notre Dame, who also owns an architecture firm in South Bend.

Former Southold artistic director Erica Fischbach remembered the young dancer as someone who had “a very special artistic quality that is just unteachable.”

“It’s almost like she transcended everybody every time she danced,” said Fischbach, now the director of the Colorado Ballet Academy. “She gave something so special to everybody who watched her that everybody just loved her. She would take people out of their lives just watching her.”