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Alan MacGregor

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Alan Duncan MacGregor
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Overview
Aliases
Occupation U.S. Senator (Massachusetts); President of the United States; attorney
First appearance Playing the Odds
Appearances
Series The MacGregor Series
Books Playing the Odds, Tempting Fate, All the Possibilities, One Man's Art, The MacGregor Brides, The Winning Hand, The MacGregor Grooms, The Perfect Neighbor
Relationships
Romantic partner(s) Shelby Campbell MacGregor
Family Daniel MacGregor (father), Anna MacGregor (mother), Caine MacGregor (brother), Serena MacGregor Blade (sister), D.C. MacGregor (son)
Friends/Allies Shelby Campbell MacGregor, Daniel MacGregor

[[Category:The MacGregor Series characters]]

Alan Duncan MacGregor is a character in Nora Roberts' The MacGregor Series. The eldest child of Daniel and Anna, he is a U.S. Senator who rises to the presidency, and the hero of All the Possibilities.

Overview

Alan MacGregor is the disciplined one — serious, steady, and possessed of a patient intensity that makes him formidable in law, in politics, and in love. He is his mother's son in temperament, though Gennie Grandeau, sketching the family from the outside, senses beneath his composed exterior a temper that could be "wicked if loosed." His arc in All the Possibilities is about learning that the most significant thing he could do for the woman he loves is let her come to him in her own time.

Background

Alan was raised at Castle MacGregor in Hyannis Port alongside his siblings Caine and Serena. He was drawn to the theory of law rather than its practice — the overview, the system, the structure of how a society governs itself — and this eventually pulled him from the courtroom into politics. He served as a United States Senator from Massachusetts before running for and winning the presidency.

His relationship with his father is affectionate and occasionally combative; Daniel is not above applying pressure to Alan, but he also respects his eldest son's judgment more than he admits. Alan inherited his mother's steadiness, which is both his greatest political asset and the quality that most infuriates Daniel, who would prefer a bit more fire.

Personality

Alan is calm, methodical, and deliberate. He thinks before he speaks, plans before he acts, and rarely loses his composure in public — a discipline that served him well in the Senate and in the White House. His smile is slow and rare, which makes it, when it arrives, more striking for the wait.

Beneath the control is a deep and specific stubbornness. Alan does not give up on things he has decided matter. His pursuit of Shelby Campbell is patient, steady, and utterly relentless — he gives her room to run while never losing sight of where he is standing. He understands that Shelby's resistance to politics is real and rooted in grief, and he chooses to wait rather than push.

He was drawn to the theory of law rather than individual cases — the broad view, the structural question of how laws shape lives, rather than the particular client and the particular courtroom. This instinct is what made him a Senator rather than a litigator.

Story Arc

All the Possibilities

Alan's book. He meets Shelby Campbell — Daniel's campaign, as usual, operating in the background — and falls immediately and completely. Shelby is everything he is not: spontaneous, loud, funny, deliberately apolitical. Her father was assassinated in front of her. She has built a life as far from Washington as she could manage while still living in it.

Alan's arc is about respecting the shape of Shelby's resistance without letting it become permanent. He is patient. He is persistent. He never misrepresents what he is or what a life with him would require. He gives Shelby the space to choose, and she does.

Later Books

Alan and Shelby appear throughout the series as the former President and First Lady — warm, established, visibly happy. Alan is the sibling other characters call when they need someone steady. He's present for significant family moments, including his son D.C.'s story in The MacGregor Grooms, where D.C.'s complicated relationship with having grown up as a president's son is given room.

Relationships

Alan's great love and his equal in every way that matters, which is to say she pushes back at him in ways no one else does. Their marriage is one of deep mutual respect and genuine affection. Shelby remains her own person — she keeps her pottery shop, she remains Shelby — and Alan loves her for exactly that.

Alan and Daniel love each other and occasionally drive each other to distraction. Daniel considers Alan's composure a mild character flaw. Alan considers Daniel's meddling an occupational hazard. Both are right. Neither says so.

Alan's son. Growing up as the president's eldest son shaped D.C. in ways that are still visible in his adult personality — the particular wariness of public life, the resistance to being defined by his family. Alan and D.C.'s relationship is warm but carries the specific weight of that childhood.

Physical Description

Alan has dark, intense eyes and a slow, rare smile. He has his mother's coloring — darker than Caine or Serena — and her composed bearing. Gennie Grandeau, in One Man's Art, sketches him and sees the power underneath the stillness.

Trivia

  • Alan is the only MacGregor child whose romantic arc involves a direct family connection through the in-laws — Shelby is Grant Campbell's sister, and Grant eventually marries Gennie Grandeau, bringing another branch of the Campbell family into the clan.
  • His middle name, Duncan, is the same as his father's middle name, continuing the MacGregor naming tradition.

See Also