The $10 million loan. So this is a borrower that, as far as we know, is a very wealthy guy. He's got a liquidity crunch growing. He's got himself into a liquidity situation that put our loan under non-accrual. It's a loan directly to him, so there's no guarantor on it, but he's on the hook for it. He's got a good collateral pledge to it, and so we're collecting on the collateral. We've seen this sort of thing before here, And it seems to happen periodically. I think this is another one-off situation. In this case, we do expect a full recovery. And we have it now non-accrual until we can either get it paid or collect it. Apart from that one relationship, as David noted, I think we've got improving trends in the loan portfolio pretty much across the board in Q3. So I think we're seeing nice progress now withstanding that one situation. On your second question about the charge-offs in the quarter, the majority of that is related to our one large credit that we've talked a lot about. And mechanically what happens there is as it moves off of the balance sheet as a loan and the collateral that we have, which was all real estate, in that case with the cross-collateralization on the four loans, that shifts from a non-performing loan or [four] (ph) non-performing loans into OREO. So as part of that you write off the specific reserve that we have and so that's really the bulk of the change in the charge-offs this quarter is related to that conversion from an NPL into OREO. And the fact that it went up is because the value of the OREO is higher than what the loan balance was. So that's a positive there and consistent with what we've been saying all along, which is, this is a complicated workout and it was going to be a whole sausage making process this year. And actually I think is progressing as well as we had hoped. And frankly, now having the collateral is way better than having a non-performing loan, because we go ahead and sell a collateral, and we have control of it at this point, and the loan's off the books. So I think those are all sort of nice silver lining there and consistent with what we had said and shows good progress in Q3. The third question about selling those properties is we have, as I said, repeatedly said, it would take several quarters to do that. And we're doing that. I think that of the three remaining properties, two of them we've seen a lot of interest in. And so I would expect those to be sold in the next quarter or two, although that's not always easy to predict, I think. We're not really interested in having some kind of fire sale. So, we'll try and maximize the value on those in line with the market conditions, which are generally positive. Andwe have those things on our books now at or below appraisal. So I think that that should be final, get done in the near term. On the ranch, that typically takes -- ranches typically take 9 to 12 months to sell, and So that's really our expectation there. We got control of that midway through the third quarter. And so we've been working hard in Q3 to get that ready to go. And we've had a number of showings there. I just don't know if it's realistic to think that'll get off the books in the short term because these large ranch properties do take a while to sell typically. And this is a very unusual and large and well-located property. It's a pretty spectacular, unique property. And just my experience with that kind of thing is it's going to take some time. Did I get all your questions, Brett?