LYNN – Thomas Commeret, 55, spent about two hours listening to soft-spoken 15-year-old Bronte Price tell the court how he allegedly shoved her into the door of his office and told her, “If you tell anyone about this I will (deleted) find you.”Price, a soft-spoken Marblehead High freshman, answered questions Tuesday from Assistant District Attorney Kim Faitella and Boston Attorney Jay Carney, who represents Commeret. The lawyers took turns objecting, demanding conferences with Lynn District Court Judge Ellen Flatley and asking the girl, who loves soccer and acting in dramatic productions, to speak louder.A jury of four women and three men heard Price say she was walking past Commeret’s office at the Marblehead Community Charter Public School on the afternoon of April 9, 2007, and stopped when she saw him drinking from a tall plastic cup. “It took him about 10 seconds to turn and see me,” she said. “I asked, ‘What are you drinking?’ I had a really sarcastic tone and he got really angry, his face got dark and he said, ‘what do you think I’m drinking?”Price said Commeret grabbed her, pushed her against the door and threatened her and she felt really scared. When he let go of her she left as fast as she could and, for several weeks, she told people conflicting stories about what happened. She did not name Commeret until the day she was interviewed by police, when she told a close friend. “I needed to tell someone. I felt a lot better,” she said. When Commeret was charged some people at the school were less supportive, she said.As she recalled the events of April 9 Commeret pursed his lips, then calculatedly pressed his upper lip with his right index finger.Faitella, who presented the bulk of the prosecution case Tuesday, elicited further testimony from former MCCPS teacher Abby (Baker) Whittredge, Marblehead Police Sgt. Marion Keating and former MCCPS teacher aide Sandy Marcus.Baker said Price backed into a corner as she questioned her about the bruises and seemed very scared. Keating said Price cried before writing the letters “COM” on a piece of paper and naming her assailant as “Mr. C.” and she said Commeret looked angry when he told her, “I am the superintendent (of the school)? Let the girl stay home.” Marcus testified to seeing a mini-bar inside an antique globe in Commeret’s office, containing several liquor bottles with broken seals.Carney pointed out that some school parents wanted Commeret out – but Price said she was unaware of her parents’ feelings about Commeret, even though they signed a petition seeking his ouster. Carney also raised an issue about Price’s love of acting, but when he asked if she was good at writing lines for actors to read she simply answered, “No.”Carney pointed out Price’s differing stories to friends, and reminded Whittredge that details in a DSS report and a Marblehead police report differed from her testimony.He briefly got Keating to misstate Commeret’s quote as “letting the child stay home,” but when he asked Keating if she were angry she said, “Not at all.”Carney pointed out to Marcus that Commeret demoted her from full-time to part-time and reduced her salary in her last year at MCCPS, and read from a letter she wrote to District Attorney Jonathan Blodgett urging him to vigorously prosecute the case – but she said she harbored no ill feelings against Commeret and when she left the school for a better job Commeret asked her to reconsider.