Jinn

I am Jinn, a being created by the God of Light to aid humanity in its pursuit of knowledge.

Jinn is a magical being held inside the Relic of Knowledge. Once summoned by those who call her by her name, she can answer three questions every one hundred years.

Appearance
Jinn is a voluptous blue woman with pointy ears and long, flowing dark blue hair. Her eyes are dark blue in the sclerae and pupils, and a lighter blue in the irises. She is nude aside from various gold accessories, most of whom have a slavery theme: a chain tiara, big hooped earrings (the right ear also has an extra earring), a choker, bracelets with chains dangling from them (along with a single bracelet on her left forearm), anklets, and a belt of chains around her waist that ends in a big ring with three prongs. Both the choker and the anklets are shaped like the band wrapped around the orb part of the Relic of Knowledge, while the rings in Jinn's ears and belt look similar to the Relic's handle.

Trivia

 * Jinn (الجن‎ al-jinn, also romanized as "djinn"; commonly anglicized as "genies") are supernatural creatures in early pre-Islamic Arabian and later Islamic mythology. The greatest magicians in Arabic lore were able to capture djinn to their service and tied them to items such as lamps or rings. The Djinn granted wishes to whoever helped them out of gratitude. Both these aspects were popularized by the folk tale of "Aladdin and the Magic Lamp," featured in One Thousand and One Nights, where a poor boy finds an oil lamp in which a wish-granting jinni was concealed.
 * "Jinn" is plural. A single member of the jinn is called a "jinni" (الجني al-jinnī, also romanized as "djinni"; commonly anglicized as "genie").
 * Jinn having a blue body is similar to the Genie from the Disney adaptation of Aladdin.
 * Haven Academy, where the Relic of Knowledge was hidden, has a statue of a chained woman resembling Jinn.