Harnessing the carrier wave of light as an alternating-current bias may enable electronics at optical clock rates(1). Lightwave-driven currents have been assumed to be essential for high-harmonic generation in solids(2-6), charge transport in nanostructures(7-8), attosecond-streaking experiments(9-16) and atomic-resolution ultrafast microscopy(17-18). However, in conventional semiconductors and dielectrics, the finite effective mass and ultrafast scattering of electrons limit their ballistic excursion and velocity. The Dirac-like, quasi-relativistic band structure of topological insulators(19-29) may allow these constraints to be lifted and may thus open a new era of lightwave electronics. To understand the associated, complex motion of ele...