Serena MacGregor Blade
From The Canon of Nora Wiki
| Serena MacGregor Blade | |
|---|---|
| No image available | |
| Overview | |
| Aliases | Rena |
| Occupation | Blackjack dealer (formerly); casino co-owner and business partner, Blade-MacGregor empire |
| 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) | Justin Blade |
| Family | Daniel MacGregor (father), Anna MacGregor (mother), Alan MacGregor (brother), Caine MacGregor (brother), Robert "Mac" MacGregor Blade (son), Duncan Blade (son), Gwendolyn Blade Maguire (daughter), Julia Blade (daughter) |
| Friends/Allies | Justin Blade, Daniel MacGregor, Anna MacGregor |
[[Category:The MacGregor Series characters]]
Serena MacGregor Blade is a character in Nora Roberts' The MacGregor Series. The youngest child of Daniel and Anna, she is the heroine of Playing the Odds and one of the series' most vivid recurring presences across all eight novels.
Overview
Serena is the wild one — by her own description and the family's general consensus. She has her father's fire and her mother's beauty, and she escaped the gravitational pull of the MacGregor name by taking a job as a blackjack dealer on a cruise ship, where she wanted to be seen as simply Serena rather than Daniel MacGregor's daughter. She found exactly that, and then found Justin Blade dealing at her table.
Background
Serena earned degrees in English, history, and sociology before walking away from the expectations that came with being a MacGregor and taking a position dealing blackjack on a cruise ship. This was not rebellion for its own sake — it was a genuine desire to inhabit her own identity before it was swallowed by the family name.
She met Justin Blade on that ship. He was a casino magnate dealing blackjack himself, which in retrospect looks exactly like the kind of thing Daniel MacGregor would arrange, though the evidence for his direct involvement in that particular meeting is circumstantial. By the time Daniel met Justin, he was already planning.
After marrying Justin, Serena became his business partner in the Blade-MacGregor hotel and casino empire — a role that suited her as well as any degree did. She is co-owner, active partner, and the person who kept the MacGregor name on the letterhead.
Personality
Serena is volatile and outspoken, closer in temperament to Caine and Daniel than to Alan. She fills rooms the way Daniel does — with personality and noise and a specific gravitational pull that makes people want to be in her orbit. She has a sharp stubbornness that is entirely her own, and she applies it to getting what she wants with the same energy Daniel applies to matchmaking.
She is also, beneath the fire, deeply devoted. Her marriages, her children, her family connections — Serena loves with the full MacGregor weight, which is considerable. She is the kind of parent and sibling who makes her presence felt whether she is in the room or not.
Story Arc
Playing the Odds
Serena's book. She meets Justin on the cruise ship, and the story unfolds as a genuine pairing of equals — two people who are each formidable in their own right, recognizing in each other something they haven't found elsewhere. Her arc is about learning that leaving the MacGregor name doesn't require leaving the possibility of a family of her own.
Later Books
Serena appears throughout the series as a warm and active presence — mother of four, business partner to Justin, daughter of Daniel, and the sibling most likely to know exactly what everyone is feeling and say so directly. In The MacGregor Brides and The Winning Hand, she is present for her daughters' and son's stories, and her warmth with her children's partners is one of the series' consistent pleasures.
Relationships
Serena's husband and business partner. They are a genuine pairing of equals — both formidable, both with fire in them, both committed to what they build together. Their marriage, visible across eight books, is one of the series' most sustained portraits of a happy long-term partnership.
Serena is most like Daniel of his three children, which produces both the deepest affection and the most combustible arguments. She is the one who understands him best and is least inclined to let him get away with things.
Serena's four children. She is present in each of their stories — rushing in when Mac's book opens, welcoming Gwen's husband, appearing at Julia's wedding. Her love for her children is as large and evident as everything else about her.
Physical Description
Serena is described as striking: gold-blond hair "in the rich shade you find in old paintings," with hints of red; violet-blue eyes that her father insists are purple and she insists are blue; high slanting cheekbones; a sharp, stubborn jaw; and delicate peach skin. She looks, in short, like someone who could deal blackjack on a cruise ship and also run a casino empire, because she has done both.
Trivia
- Serena's violet-blue eyes are a recurring source of mock-argument with Daniel, who insists they are purple. She insists they are blue. This dispute has never been resolved.
- She is the only MacGregor child whose married name does not include MacGregor — she became Blade, though the family empire kept the MacGregor name in its title.
- Her children's coloring divided sharply between Blade (Mac, Duncan) and MacGregor (Gwen): a visible split of her two family lines in the next generation.
Quotes
- "I am not Daniel MacGregor's daughter on a cruise ship. I am Serena." — Playing the Odds (paraphrase)