Thank you, Denis. I'll start with the financial review of the Cambridge merger before moving into the full results for the third quarter. As a reminder, the merger closed early in the third quarter on July 12. As Denis mentioned, we are on track to successfully achieve the merger-related financial targets that were announced just over a year ago. As part of the merger closing, we mark-to-market the Cambridge balance sheet. Slide 7 outlines the final purchase accounting adjustments relative to estimates at time of announcement. Those came in as expected, but I'll walk through a few key differences. The interest rate for fair value mark on loans was $250 million at closing significantly lower than the $413 million estimated a year ago. The credit mark on PCD loans was $56 million at closing. The credit mark is the result of a very thorough review of all Cambridge loans. The increase from expectations a year ago was driven mainly by office commercial real estate loans given the challenges for that sector in the current environment. I'll provide additional color later in my remarks on asset quality. As Denis mentioned, Eastern sold all of Cambridge's investments in the days after closing and use the proceeds to eliminate Cambridge wholesale funding. The original securities mark of $172 million, therefore, will not be accreted into income. This equates to $29 million to $34 million per annum. On Slide 8, we have provided an estimated schedule of accretion and amortization for the fair value marks that will impact earnings going forward. Most notable is the accretion of the discount on acquired loans. As a reminder, we will accrete into income the $250 million interest rate mark on loans plus a $33 million credit mark on non-PCD loans, which totals $283 million over the lives of those loans. We expect this will create income of approximately $12 million to $14 million each quarter for the next year. We have modeled the loan accretion schedule based on the best information we have available but as you know, actual accretion recognized will be subject to loan pre-payments over time. Those prepayment rates will be based on changes in market interest rates. If rates decline, we'd expect to see faster prepayments in certain loan categories, creating accelerated recognition of the associated discount. However, it's important to remember that although these loans are marked current rate levels, the underlying interest rates on the loans are relatively low. This means that rates would have to fall pretty far from where they are today before borrowers have incentive to refinance and pay off fixed rate loans. For this reason, we believe we have strong protection against prepayment risk on these assets and the income stream should have a higher level of predictability. Consistent with all aspects of this merger, Eastern is committed to continuing and growing the strong relationships that Cambridge has fostered with its customers. As the legacy Cambridge loans pay down over time, creating a reduction in accretion income, the acquired loans will be replaced with new loans at market yields continuing to drive interest income. In the bottom half of slide 8, we also provide expected amortization of the core deposit intangible and wealth intangibles, which will be included in non-interest expense. Combined, we expect these non-cash expenses to about $7 million per quarter over the next few quarters. I'll now move into our results for the third quarter, beginning on slide 9. We reported a GAAP net loss of $6 million in the third quarter due to non-recurring merger items, primarily the day two non-PCD loan reserve expense of $40.9 million as well as the $30.5 million in M&A expenses. On an operating basis, net income was $49.7 million or $0.25 per share. This higher level of operating earnings is driven by a larger balance sheet, a higher margin, which increased 33 basis points in the quarter to 2.97%. On the fee income side, our wealth revenues more than doubled to $14.9 million in the third quarter. The balance sheet remains very strong. Tangible book value per share ended the quarter at $12.17. Our Board approved a $0.01 raise in the quarterly dividend, and we repurchased 836,000 shares of stock at an average price of $15.08 for a total of $12.6 million in the quarter. Asset quality also remains strong. Although, non-performing loans increased to $125 million, the increase was due to PCD loans that have been conservatively reserved for. I'll discuss asset quality more later in my remarks. Transitioning to the income statement for the quarter. Slide 10 provides a summary of both GAAP and operating results and return metrics. As I mentioned, our GAAP loss of $6 million for the quarter was driven by merger items. Operating net income of $49.7 million was $13 million higher than in the prior quarter, an increase of 36%. There was considerable noise in the quarter due to the merger, which appeared in three places. The provision for credit losses included $40.9 million reserve on non-PCD Cambridge loans. Non-interest income included a $3 million fixed asset write-down that was in other non-interest income and non-interest expense contained $27.6 million of expenses concentrated in salaries and benefits. Please see slide 33 for a full breakout of M&A costs during the quarter. Note that our operating tax rate for the quarter was modestly elevated at 24.6%. And I'll provide an update on the tax rate we expect going forward when I cover our outlook in a few minutes. Moving to the margin on slide 11. It's important to remember that we had a partial quarter impact of the merger beginning on July 13. For September, our margin on an FTE basis was 3.05%. We are encouraged by the recent margin growth and expect additional rate cuts by the Fed to provide benefit, especially if the yield curve normalizes towards a traditional upward sloping shape. Total non-interest income on slide 12 was $33.5 million in the third quarter and $32.9 million on an operating basis. Remember, in Q2 we had an early deposit termination payment of $7.8 million, which skewed our results. Wealth fees increased from $6.7 million to $14.9 million in the third quarter, driven by the increase in assets under management from Cambridge as well as strong market performance. Deposit service charges were $8.1 million in the third quarter, an increase of $200,000. Please note that certain deposit service charges were temporarily weighed for our new Cambridge customers, contracting approximately $300,000 in income for the quarter. These fees will be reinstated in mid-Q4. Moving to slide 13. Total non-interest expense was $159.8 million and $130.9 million on an operating basis. There were two primary drivers to the linked quarter change in operating expenses. First, salaries and benefits on an operating basis increased $15.4 million due to the addition of colleagues from Cambridge. Second, we saw an increase in amortization expense of $5.7 million due to the amortization of the core deposit and wealth management intangibles. As I mentioned earlier, we have the vast majority of merger-related cost saves reflected in Q3 results. The balance sheet on slide 14 shows the level of deposits, loans, borrowings and investments post merger. The balance sheet is extremely healthy with $25.5 billion in total assets, a tangible common equity ratio of 10.7%, a loan-to-deposit ratio in the mid-80s and essentially no wholesale funding. We added approximately $3.9 billion in loans and $3.7 billion in deposits from Cambridge. Organic growth in the quarter was slow with essentially flat loan levels and a decline in deposits driven by seasonality. We are optimistic about our local economy, the inflection point we are at in the rate cycle, and our prospects for growth moving into 2025. Moving to deposits and loans on Slides 15 and 16. The key quarter-over-quarter changes related to Cambridge while organic activity remain muted. We added high-quality deposits through the merger. We continue to have approximately 50% of our total our total deposits and checking accounts and our total deposit cost is very well contained at 182 basis points, demonstrating the strength of the combined deposit franchise. On the loan side, we added $2.3 billion of commercial loans and another $1.5 billion in residential loans from Cambridge. We are enthusiastic about the transition for the Cambridge customers, which went seamlessly, and we are making concerted efforts to continue to welcome and serve those customers who are new to Eastern. Moving to the credit impacts of Cambridge on Slide 19. The allowance increased from 111 basis points last quarter to 143 basis points this quarter, and stands at $253.8 million. The build was comprised of $56 million of the day one Cambridge PCD reserves which were recorded to the allowance with the offset to goodwill. Additionally, we booked a day two provision on non-PCD loans of $41 million. The legacy Eastern provision was $6 million, in line with the past several quarters and charge-offs totaled $5 million. Let's now take a closer look at the acquired loans and how we assess the credit impact of the Cambridge portfolio beginning on Slide 20. The combined credit mark on PCD and non-PCD loans was estimated at $44 million at the time of announcement versus $89 million at closing. The PCD pool of loans was expanded over the last year, primarily due to deterioration in the office market. Over the past year, distressed office property sales have increased giving us a clearer picture of values. Slide 20 shows the total unpaid principal balance of PCD loans was $353 million, or 9% of total Cambridge loans. We recorded $56 million of reserves associated with these PCD loans via a gross-up of the allowance that was recorded through goodwill. Slide 22 highlights our pre investor office exposure post-merger, which totals $900 million or 5% of total loans, unchanged from legacy Eastern's percentage. Criticized and classified investor office loans increased to $178 million or about 20% of total investor office loans. We have reserves totaling $72 million or 8% against our $900 million of investor office loans. When looking at overall asset quality on Slide 23, non-performing loans increased to $125 million or 70 basis points of total loans driven by the addition of Cambridge PCD loans. Legacy Eastern levels of non-performing loans remained stable from recent quarters. Net charge-offs were $5.1 million in the quarter or 12 basis points of total loans. We feel very comfortable with the allowance of $254 million provides very strong coverage for the loan portfolio. Moving now to our outlook, which is for Q4 only. We expect to provide 2025 guidance in January once we work through our annual budget process. For Q4, we expect loan balances to be relatively flat. While we don't anticipate much loan growth in Q4, we are seeing a build in commercial lending pipelines, a positive leading indicator cater for future growth. Deposits typically exhibit seasonal declines late in the year, and we have the maturity of $185 million deposit acquired from Century Bank that is maturing in mid-November. We expect net interest margin -- net interest income of $175 million to $180 million and net interest margin to be between 3% and 3.05%. As I mentioned earlier, we expect declines in short-term rates to benefit the margin and net interest income going forward. Approximately 20% of the loan book net attaches resets on short-term interest rate. We expect betas on our interest-bearing deposits to be 40% to 50%, on the way down, inclusive of our CD book. Operating noninterest income is expected to be in the range of $33 million to $34 million. Operating noninterest expense is expected to be between $130 million and $132 million with fully achieved cost saves. This includes intangible amortization of about $7 million. We also anticipate $2 million to $3 million in nonoperating M&A expenses in Q4. Lastly, we expect the tax rate to normalize for the full year in the range of 22% to 23%. That concludes our comments for the quarter, and we'll now open the line for your questions.