Thank you, Chuck. Good morning, everyone. Directing your attention to third quarter results, beginning with Slide 4. The Seacoast team delivered a strong quarter with adjusted net income, which excludes merger-related charges increasing 48% year-over-year to $45.2 million or $0.52 per share. Organic deposits, excluding brokered and Heartland acquired deposits, grew $212 million, or 7% annualized and that organic growth included $80 million in noninterest-bearing deposits. Loan production continued to be strong with organic growth in balances of 8% on an annualized basis. The pipeline has reached a record high, reflecting the success of recent hiring and the increase in the balance sheet following the completion of the Villages acquisition in October. Net interest income was $133.5 million, an increase of 5% from the prior quarter, and net interest margin excluding accretion on acquired loans expanded 3 basis points to 3.32%. Tangible book value per share increased 9% year-over-year to $17.61, remarkable given that the Heartland acquisition included 50% cash consideration. Our capital position continues to be very strong. Seacoast's Tier 1 capital ratio was 14.5%, and the ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets is 9.8%. We completed our acquisition of Heartland Bancshares on July 11, adding 4 branches and approximately $824 million in assets. The technology conversion was fully completed in the third quarter. And on October 1, we finalized our acquisition of Villages Bancorporation, adding 19 branches and over $4 billion in assets. We expect the full technology conversion to happen early in the third quarter of 2026. Turning to Slide 5. Net interest income increased by $6.6 million or 5%, compared to the prior quarter and by $26.9 million or 25%, compared to the prior year quarter. The net interest margin declined 1 basis point to 3.57% and excluding accretion on acquired loans expanded 3 basis points from the prior quarter to 3.32%. In the securities portfolio, yields increased 5 basis points to 3.92%. Loan yields declined 2 basis points to 5.96%. Excluding accretion, loan yields increased 3 basis points to 5.61%. The cost of deposits remained near flat with only a 1 basis point increase during the quarter to 1.81%. And overall cost of funds is down 3 basis points from the prior quarter. With strong momentum in loan growth, deposit costs now lower and stabilizing, additional liquidity and accretive acquisitions, we expect net interest income to continue to grow. Consistent with our previous guidance, we expect to exit the year with the core net interest margin reaching approximately 3.45%, inclusive of recent acquisitions. Moving to Slide 6. Noninterest income, excluding securities activity was $24.7 million, increasing 5% from the prior year quarter. Fee revenue continues to benefit from our investments in talent and expansion of treasury management services to commercial customers with service charges on deposits increasing 12% from the prior quarter. Our wealth management team delivered a record quarter in new AUM, continuing its strong performance and reinforcing its position as a key growth driver for the organization. $258 million in new AUM was added in the third quarter, the highest quarterly result in the division's history and $473 million in new AUM in 2025 year-to-date. BOLI income increased to $3.9 million in the third quarter and included $1.3 million in benefits. Other income totaled $6 million, and included higher gains on SBA loan sales and higher loan swap fees. Looking ahead to the fourth quarter, we expect noninterest income in a range from $22 million to $24 million. Moving to Slide 7. Again, the Wealth division continues to grow entirely organic and with significant referrals from our commercial teams, with total AUM increasing 24% year-over-year and a 25% annual CAGR in the past 5 years. On Slide 8, noninterest expense in the third quarter was $102 million, an increase of $10.3 million, and the third quarter included $10.8 million in merger-related expenses. Higher salaries and wages reflect continued expansion and the addition of Heartland as well as higher performance-driven incentives. Outsourced data processing costs totaled $9.3 million an increase of $0.8 million, reflecting higher transaction volume and growth in customers, including from the acquisition of Heartland. Other categories of expenses were in line with expectations. Our adjusted efficiency ratio improved to 53.8%, down from 55.4% in the second quarter, demonstrating continued operating leverage. We continue to remain focused on profitability and performance and expect continued disciplined management of overhead and the efficiency ratio. With the addition of the Villages beginning in October, we expect adjusted expenses for the fourth quarter, excluding direct merger-related costs to be in the range of $110 million to $112 million. Turning to Slide 9. Loan outstandings, excluding the impact of the Heartland acquisition, increased at an annualized 8%. The Pipelines increased 30% to $1.2 billion, and we continue to see strong broad-based demand across our markets. Loan yields declined 2 basis points with lower accretion on acquired loans with the prior quarter impacted by elevated payoffs. Excluding the effect of accretion, yields increased 3 basis points from the prior quarter to 5.61%. Looking forward, the pipeline remains strong, and we expect continued high single-digit organic loan growth in the coming quarter. With the addition of the Villages in the fourth quarter, we expect loan-to-deposit ratio at year-end 2025 to be below 75%, allowing significant continued growth opportunities. Turning to Slide 10. Portfolio diversification in terms of asset mix, industry and loan type has been a critical element of the company's lending strategy. Exposure is broadly distributed, and we continue to be vigilant in maintaining our disciplined, conservative credit culture. Nonowner-occupied commercial real estate loans represent 34% of all loans and are distributed across industries and collateral types. As we have for many years, we consistently managed our portfolio to keep construction and land development loans and commercial real estate loans well below regulatory guidance. These measures are significantly below the peer group at 32% and 223% of consolidated risk-based capital, respectively. We've managed our loan portfolio with diverse distribution across categories and retain granularity to manage risk. Moving to credit topics on Slide 11. The allowance for credit losses totaled $147.5 million, with coverage to total loans remaining flat at 1.34%. The allowance for credit losses, combined with the $102.2 million remaining unrecognized discount on acquired loans, totals $249.7 million or 2.27% of total loans that's available to cover potential losses. Moving to Slide 12, looking at quarterly trends in credit metrics, which remain strong. We recorded net charge-offs of $3.2 million during the quarter or 12 basis points annualized. Nonperforming loans declined by $3.6 million during the quarter and represent only 0.55% of total loans. Accruing past due loans moved slightly higher to 0.19% of total loans. The level of criticized and classified loans stands at 2.5% of total loans, generally in line with prior periods. As Chuck mentioned in his opening remarks, Seacoast continues to have very limited exposure to shared national credits or nondepository financial institutions. We have no exposure to private equity debt funds. Moving to Slide 13, and the Investment Securities portfolio. Net unrealized losses in the AFS portfolio improved by $36 million during the third quarter, driven by changes in long-term rates. The portfolio yield increased 5 basis points to 3.92%, reflecting $385 million in purchases of primarily agency mortgage-backed securities with an average yield of 5.03%. Turning to Slide 14, and the Deposit portfolio. Seacoast continues to benefit from a diverse deposit base. Customer transaction accounts represent 48% of total deposits which continues to highlight our long-standing relationship-focused approach. Our customers are highly engaged and have a long history with us and low average balances reflect the granular relationship nature of our franchise. On Slide 15, organic deposit growth, excluding changes in brokered deposits and the acquired Heartland deposits, was $212.3 million, or 7% annualized, of which $80.4 million was noninterest-bearing deposit growth. Cost of deposits increased slightly by 1 basis point to 1.81%. The Heartland acquisition added over $700 million in a strong core deposit franchise and the #1 market share in Highlands County. We continue to build share across our markets with a focus on core relationship deposits. For the fourth quarter 2025, we expect low to mid-single-digit organic deposit growth. And finally, on Slide 16, our capital position continues to be very strong. Tangible book value per share has grown to $17.61, and the ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets held strong at 9.8%. As expected, return on tangible common equity decreased reflecting the impact of the Heartland acquisition. And in the fourth quarter, we'll see the initial impact of the Villages acquisition on these metrics. Into the first quarter of 2026 and moving forward, we expect to see meaningful improvements in return on equity measures. Our risk-based and Tier 1 capital ratios remain among the highest in the industry. Results this quarter reflect our ability to deliver strong sustainable performance. Our balance sheet is well positioned and our capital position is strong. We'll continue to execute on our organic growth and profitability goals as we integrate recent acquisitions and grow the franchise. I'll now turn the call back over to Chuck.