Thanks, Darleen. Well, Pat and Andrew have already commented on the loan growth. We've experienced in the past quarter as well as year-to-date, an annualized growth rate of 9%, I think, compares favorably to our peers. The third quarter was right in line with budgeted loan growth. And after 2 quarters of growth that were well ahead of plan, I think we're positioned to report good overall growth in earnings at the end of the year. For the past couple of years, I've reported on our goal to do more C&I business, which includes owner-occupied real estate, while maintaining a healthy level of investor real estate and consumer lending. And I'm happy to report that the trend of growing C&I business has continued. New loans closed and funded for the 9 months ending 9/30/25 were comprised 65% by C&I loans and 18% by investor real estate, the remainder consisting mainly of consumer loans. That's an increase in C&I lending from 2024 when C&I loans represented 64% of all new loans. The regional commercial banking teams continue to generate most of the loan growth for us. They represented 39% of new loans generated in Q3, followed by investor real estate at 28%, private equity at 18% and small business banking at 9%. Our specialty areas, which also includes asset-based lending, are all at or very close to their growth plans for the year. Regarding investor real estate, we closed a number of new loans in the third quarter, but similar to previous periods, new loans were offset by payoffs. You'll see a bump up in investor real estate if you look at the schedules in the earnings release, but that was due mainly to a reclassification of a loan from owner-occupied to investor. Our goal over time is to moderate growth in investor real estate and manage more of that business in its own investor real estate team, focusing on relationships and loan concentrations, and that continues to go very well. A focus of most community banks is the ratio of investor real estate loans to total capital, as Pat mentioned, we hit a high point at 430% of capital after the Malvern acquisition, but got to 390% in March of 2025 and finished Q3 at 370%, which is about where we want to be. The lending pipeline at the end of the third quarter stood at $283 million of probable fundings, down 6% from the level of probable fundings at June 30. The number of deals in the pipeline, however, is up 5% from the end of Q2. If one breaks down the components of the pipeline at quarter end, C&I loans made up 68% of the overall pipeline, exactly where we were at June 30 and up from 63% at March 31. Overall, I'm happy with where the new business pipeline stands. We are anticipating a higher level of loan payoffs in Q4 than what we've experienced on average over each of the first 3 quarters, which is why despite a strong start to the year from the standpoint of overall loan growth, our target has remained in the 6% to 7% growth range. On the topic of asset quality, Andrew provided a good outline on where we are. I think things continue to be in good shape. The loan portfolio continues to be well diversified. Andrew mentioned some softness in the small business loan portfolio. We've made some adjustments there, and we anticipate a return to the quality we've experienced previously. Overall, it's a modest piece of the overall loan portfolio. I should probably also comment on what's been out there in the banking news about the fear of deteriorating credit quality and the "one-offs" cited by a handful of banks. I can only say that we don't do any lending into deals like what you read about publicly around First Brands, Tricolor, factoring and borrowers not providing financial information. That's not what we do. We have very -- and we have very limited exposure to NBFIs and none to private lenders. In summary, I think we had a good third quarter. Loan growth was in line with budget, and we expect to meet our loan growth goals for the year. That pretty much concludes my remarks. So I'll turn things back to Pat for any final comments.