The teen who was hounded and ultimately killed by alleged Texas school shooter Dimitrios Pagourtzis told her parents she was afraid the creep would hurt her — and that if he did, she’d “haunt him forever,” her dad said.

Shana Fisher, 16, had the chilling premonition just two weeks before she was gunned down — along with seven other students and two teachers at Santa Fe High School.

“Shana told her mother two weeks ago he was going to come and kill her,” her dad, Timothy Thomas, told the Daily Mail.

The girl’s mother, Sadie Rodriguez, recounted to multiple outlets how the twisted Pagourtzis, 17, went after her daughter for four months — until Fisher ultimately told him to cut it out in front of their class, a week before his rampage.

“I know he had pestered her to go out with him. She kept telling him no. For one, he supposedly already had a girlfriend. And two, she just didn’t have feelings for the boy,” said Thomas, 41.

“What kind of person thinks the appropriate response is to kill her and a class full of people?”

The high school junior told her parents Pagourtzis was going to try to kill her, the dad said.

“He had told her himself he was going to kill her. He was walking around planning this in his head for weeks,” Thomas said. “Shana said that if he came into the school with a gun and killed her, she would haunt him for the rest of his life.”

Thomas, who split with the teen’s mom and remarried 13 years ago, said he recently reconnected with his daughter and watched her grow into a “beautiful, smart” young woman who dreamed of becoming an artist.

“I believe my daughter has moved from here to heaven, those thoughts are what’s keeping me going,” he said.

The distraught dad wondered how none of Pagourtzis’ teachers saw the shooting coming.

“If they are smart enough to teach our kids, they should be smart enough to see when something is badly wrong with someone,” he said.

Officials have said that unlike with other recent mass killers, no major red flags were raised about Pagourtzis prior to his rampage, though classmates described him as a “weird loner” who “never seemed that right.”