>>521054949
Sesshomaru-sama was not fond of children, you fool. Sesshomaru-sama made it clear that he, Sesshomaru, would protect absolutely no one. However, the sword Tessaiga, which he wanted to inherit from his father but which was then inherited by his younger half-brother Iuyasha, is a protective sword. Sesshomaru-sama cannot use Tessaiga because he does not want to protect anyone. During the battle for the sword, he is seriously injured and loses his left arm. An orphan girl, Rin, who was beaten out of her village, runs to him as he lies injured in the forest. She hopes to be taken under his protection and brings him food and water. He rejects her several times, but does not kill her. She then follows him persistently. He did not bring her to him. She is killed by wolves. The sword he inherited, Tensaiga, can only bring the dead back to life. He first tries the sword on his faithful goblin companion and then on the dead girl. She then follows him. He doesn't really care about her either. He only protects her a few times from attacking monsters and dangers—but he does so purely out of self-interest, to test himself to see if he can perhaps wield the coveted sword Tessaiga after all. There is absolutely no erotic or romantic tension between Sesshomaru-sama and little Rin, at most a naive infatuation on the part of the girl. Sure, a spin-off of the Inuyasha series is based on the character of Rin and Sesshomaru-sama's daughter, but they obviously didn't get married until Rin was already an adult.