Thanks, Jeff. As Jeff just hit on a lot of the key drivers for the quarter, I will go into a bit more detail in a few areas, focusing primarily on the Enterprise acquisition, some of the big moving pieces during the quarter, and expected trends going forward. To summarize the quarter results, 2025 third-quarter GAAP net income was $34.3 million and diluted EPS was $0.69, resulting in a 0.55% return on assets, a 3.82% return on average common equity, and a 5.84% return on average tangible common equity. Excluding $23.9 million of merger and acquisition expenses, and $34.5 million of day two CECL provision for non-PCD acquired loans and their related tax impacts, the adjusted operating net income for the quarter was $77.4 million or $1.55 diluted EPS, representing a 1.23% return on assets, an 8.63% return on average common equity, and a 13.2% return on average tangible common equity. I'll start with some of the key metrics that are heavily impacted by the Enterprise acquisition. First, in terms of a capital update, a reminder, we originally estimated the Enterprise deal to result in 9.8% tangible book dilution. Including estimated M&A to be incurred in the fourth quarter, we pegged actual tangible book dilution right around 7% as the loan interest and credit marks came in lower than originally modeled. As such, we anticipate slightly lower earnings accretion than originally modeled as well. In addition, we repurchased $23.4 million capital at an average price per share of $64.07 during the quarter. Despite the deal impact dilution and repurchase activity, our improved earnings profile and OCI movement resulted in a tangible book value per share decrease for the quarter, of only $2.17 or 4.5% while the tangible book value per share is up modestly over the year-ago metric. Regarding the net interest margin, the reported margin improved meaningfully to 3.62% for the quarter. The 25 basis point increase from the prior quarter can be summarized by highlighting a few key components. First, both the Rockland Trust and Enterprise Bank balance sheet profiles are well-positioned to experience margin growth from loan and securities cash flow repricing, and we saw that drive a good portion of the increase this quarter. In addition, though it has negligible impact on the actual net interest income results, the margin also improved slightly by the payoff of approximately $110 million of acquired debt from Enterprise. The margin also expanded approximately five basis points due to purchase discount accretion on the acquired securities book. And lastly, saw approximately eight basis points of expansion from purchase loan accretion. Regarding this last item, we recognize that the loan accretion results are less than suggested in our guidance last quarter. I would suggest that this is purely a timing issue. The total accretable loan interest and CreditMark is approximately $160 million, and we will expect the vast majority of that to come in over the next five to seven years. However, we remind everyone that the actual results can often be lumpy due to prepayments, individual loan payoffs, and repricing events. As long as longer-term rates remain intact, we are confident that our reported margin will sustain and will reflect a sustainable level as those accretion numbers roll down. With the Federal Reserve cut occurring in mid-September, the quarterly results had very little impact from the Fed action. We continue to reiterate our guidance that the bank is positioned to see little impact on the net interest margin from the recent and any future Fed cuts. Shifting gears to loan and deposit activity for the quarter. We are very pleased with the organic results for the quarter. As Jeff just alluded to, you saw our strategic initiative to focus on relationship CRE and C&I lending on display. As total C&I balances increased organically over 13% on an annualized basis for the quarter and are up over 7% through the first nine months of the year. In addition, we are still optimistic over CRE construction activity moving forward with the year-to-date declines driven primarily by runoff and workouts of more transactional balances. Specific to the Enterprise acquisition, our newly acquired teams are working off of the same playbook. Prioritizing C&I and relationship CRE, and they have not missed a beat remaining very active in the deal flow during the quarter. This focus resulted in a modest decline of approximately $45 million in total loan balances from the enterprise activity which was nicely offset by growth in the legacy Rockland book. Moving to the deposit side of the balance sheet, the story is equally positive. First, specific to the enterprise acquired balances, the third-quarter results reflected a decline of approximately $80 million. However, only $30 million of that relates to relationship balances. While $50 million reflected the payoff of a maturing brokered CD. And similar to the loan activity, the legacy Rockland deposit organic growth more than offset the enterprise-related reductions. Resulted in approximately 1% combined annualized growth for the quarter. Switching gears to asset quality. The quarterly results capture a few different moving pieces related to the allowance for loan loss and provision levels. High-level net charge-off activity was only $1.8 million for the quarter. Or four basis points on an annualized basis and overall asset quality metrics remain strong. To provide a little more color on the reported results, the allowance for loan loss increased $45.7 million for the quarter which includes $34.5 million of day two provision on non-PCD acquired loans, $9 million of carryover allowance on acquired PCD loans, and $4 million of core provision less charge-off activity. Total non-performing assets at September 30 are 0.35% of total assets and include approximately $25 million of acquired NPAs from Enterprise. And though no new to non-performing activity was up slightly from the prior quarter, no material loss exposures were identified in those recent downgrades. Rounding out the update on non-interest related items, we are pleased to report that both non-interest income and non-interest expense are right in line with expectations following the Enterprise merger. On the fee income side, as Jeff just mentioned, it's worth re-highlighting that the merger brought over an additional $1.4 billion in assets under administration. With the current quarter activity, total AUA grew to $9.2 billion as of September 30. On the expense side, I will highlight a few key items. First, we reaffirm our original guidance of achieving 30% cost saves on the acquired enterprise expense base. To be fully realized during 2026. Merger-related expenses totaled $23.9 million for the quarter and were comprised primarily of severance-related costs and professional fees. Amortization of intangible assets for the quarter was $7.3 million with $6.1 million related to the newly acquired intangibles from the Enterprise deal. And as Jeff mentioned in his comments, we are working through implementation efforts for a core system upgrade in May '26. We had little impact from this in the third-quarter expenses, though we do anticipate approximately $5 million of one-time costs to be incurred over the next couple of quarters. And lastly, the reported tax rate for the quarter stayed relatively consistent at 22.8%. I'll now just close out my comments with fourth-quarter guidance only as I will plan to give full-year 2026 guidance with our fourth-quarter results. In terms of both loan and deposit growth, we anticipate a low single-digit percentage increase off the September balances. Regarding asset quality, as I've been stating, we still do not see any pervasive issues across segments. And as such, provision will continue to be highly driven by developments of individual commercial credits. Regarding the net interest margin, we reaffirm and anticipate 4% to six basis points of expansion on an adjusted basis which excludes loan accretion impact, which as I noted before can be volatile on a quarter-to-quarter basis. For non-interest income, we estimate flat to the low single-digit percentage increase off the third-quarter results. And for non-interest expense, we anticipate total core expenses excluding merger-related costs and one-time conversion upgrade costs to decrease by approximately $2 million. This decrease represents a portion of the remaining enterprise cost saves expected to be realized. As some temporary salary costs will extend into the first quarter. Now, as I just alluded to earlier, with the enterprise core conversion behind us, we are ramping up efforts in preparation work for our upcoming core system upgrade. Which we estimate will result in approximately $3 million to $5 million of one-time costs during the fourth quarter. And lastly, the core tax rate for the fourth quarter is expected to be in the 23% range, further impacted by any one-time adjustments associated with finalizing the 2024 tax returns. That concludes my comments. And with that, we'll now open it up for questions.