Watch out — the “kayak killer” is back in the water.

Angelika Graswald, the Latvian woman who admitted to letting her fiancé drown in the Husdon River after pulling the drain plug from his kayak, says in a new interview that she’s out paddling again while on parole.

In a profile for Elle magazine — which includes a bizarre photoshoot featuring Graswald underwater in her bathtub — the 39-year-old ex-con said she has been living, working and kayaking at a church camp in upstate Orange County, near where her husband-to-be died.

And she says she has no regrets.

“I don’t regret what happened. I don’t think ‘What if’ anymore,” Graswald, who became a born-again Christian in prison, told the magazine.

“That’s the beauty of being a Christian. You know you have a bright future.”

Graswald was convicted of criminally negligent homicide in the death of Vincent Viafore in 2017, in a sweetheart plea deal that saw her spend just two and a half years behind bars, including time served.

She tearfully admitted to the court that she pulled the plug from Viafore’s boat before watching him drown as his kayak capsized during a booze-fueled boating trip two years earlier.

Graswald had previously maintained her innocence, despite telling police in an 11-hour interrogation that she was “euphoric” about his death and that she “wanted him dead and now he’s gone.”

In the new interview, she wouldn’t elaborate on what happened the night of Viafore’s death, saying: “Bottom line, I’m the only living person who’s still here, and I’m the only one who knows. So it’s between me and God. We’ll just leave it at that. I don’t care what anybody else thinks.”

But she said Viafore saved her life by telling her to call 911, where the operator instructed her to paddle to shore — because otherwise she would’ve drowned trying to save him.

“Vince loved me. I loved him. He had mentioned that he would die for me if need be, and I feel like he did so I could live. He saved me in a way,” she told the mag.

“I was naïve enough to think that I could help him. I was wrong on that one, too. I’ve been in these situations on the Hudson before, where it was dangerous, and I always got out of it, so I felt like that night I could, too. You know how you get careless? I was careless. So was he. We both were. It cost him. It cost him his life.”

She also now blames the “euphoria” on a condition called hypomania, a milder form of bipolar disorder that can be brought on by trauma, according to Elle.

“I had a book on grieving that I gave to [my lawyer] Richard after his uncle passed … It actually talked about it,” she said, explaining that the book said it’s normal to feel euphoria after a loved one dies.

“That needs to be out there, somehow.”

She added that she was unfairly perceived as cold and unfeeling after Viafore’s death because “Russian women are not meant to be seen crying or as weak or broken.”

Graswald claims she was just “naïve” in trusting the police during her interrogation, which she thought of as “therapy,” because she didn’t realize she was a suspect.

“I grew up around police, and I’ve trusted them, so that was my fault,” she told Elle.

“I was just being honest … They said it was therapy.”