Hell hath no fury: Fire investigators in Maryland say Natasha Joyner, 32, started this apartment building fire in New Carrolton on September 17 because she was upset with her ex

A Maryland woman has been charged with arson and endangerment after investigators say she started a fire inside her apartment building because she was angry at her ex-boyfriend.

According to the Prince George's County Fire Department, Natasha Joyner, 32, of New Carrolton, set her third-floor apartment at 5334 85th Avenue ablaze just before 3.30pm on September 17.

From her unit the fire quickly spread to the rest of the complex, leading to the evacuation of 132 tenants.

Photos and video taken at the scene as the inferno raged on show red flames shooting out of the roof of the building and a column of thick, black smoke rising into the sky.

It took firefighters two hours to extinguish the three-alarm blaze ravaging the three-story complex consisting of four building. Their task was further complicated by the fact that there was not enough water in nearby hydrants, forcing firefighters to get additional water down the street.

It took firefighters two hours to put out the three-alarm blaze on 85th Avenue

No injuries were reported, but the fire caused $2.2million in property damage to 44 units

Officials believe Joyner set her third-floor apartment on fire, and from there it spread to the rest of the four-building apartment complex

No injuries were reported as a result of the fire, but the conflagration caused $2.2million in property damage to 44 units.

'I lost everything,' displaced tenant Darnell Jackson told WJLA shortly after being evacuated. 'What I got on is what I got. That's it.'

On Friday, the fire department announced Joyner’s arrest, stating that the woman was taken into custody the day before and booked into the county jail on charges of arson, malicious burning, malicious destruction of property and reckless endangerment.

The press release from the fire department said Joyner set the building alight 'because she was allegedly upset with an ex-boyfriend.'

Firefighters had a tough time putting out the blaze because there was not enough water in nearby hydrants