"No, I did not… I would never ask somebody to bring wine," she said.
Fairley asked if Burke appeared to be breaking any "rules".
His appearance seemed "very, very inappropriate", she said, but she believed he was there to discuss the fraudster she had reported to Orewa police weeks prior.
"Why didn't you send him on his way… being a strong-minded woman?" Fairley asked.
The woman, whose name is suppressed under law, asked if she was supposed to report him to police.
"Well, why didn't you?" Fairley said.
The woman wondered what she was supposed to tell police - that a police officer had brought her beer and wine?
"Well, hindsight is a wonderful thing isn't it?" she said.
Fairley asked if she was comfortable having a near-stranger in her house.
"This is a police officer, this is not somebody off the street," she replied.
"He's a police officer. We trust the police."
Yesterday, the woman alleged Burke arrived at her Auckland home uninvited in 2002, weeks after she reported information to police.
The court heard he drank a box of beers he had brought to her house.
She offered him something to eat and made up the spare bedroom because she was concerned about his ability to drive safely, she previously told the court.
"I have never seen someone drink so much," she said today.
But she alleges Burke instead pushed her to the floor and sexually assaulted her.
"I kept trying to push back. It just happened so quickly," she said.
The trial before Justice Sarah Katz is set down for two weeks and the second complainant is scheduled to give evidence tomorrow.