Yup, your close vote was automatically cleared by the system when the duplicate target was deleted. These events occurred at almost exactly the same time, down to the second.
The close vote being removed also removes the post from the closure review queue. Nobody else needs to review it for the originally flagged reason.
Overall, like Cerbrus, I'd say the behavior makes sense. Questions can't be closed as duplicates of deleted questions, and even if they could, that wouldn't be useful. So it just makes sense for that closure vote to be invalidated.
The only edge case is when it's the same user posting the same question repeatedly. In that case, they might be able to cover their tracks by deleting their previous questions. If you see something like this occurring, just raise a moderator flag on one of the questions and let us know that you've observed a disturbing pattern. We will investigate, and if we determine that your concern is valid, we'll take the appropriate action.
Your not being able to cast another close vote is also officially by design. We only let users vote to close once, whether the question is successfully closed or not. In this particular case, it might be useful for the vote to be cleared in such a way as if it had never existed at all, thus allowing you to vote to close again for a different reason. I don't know, I'd have to think through the consequences of that. Don't hold your breath, though; this would require changes to the system that I doubt will be implemented soon. Note that this would also be a situation where you could raise a custom moderator flag. Explain exactly what happened, why you can no longer vote to close, and also provide your rationale for why a moderator should close the question. This would address the case where the question is actually unclear or too broad, but you were just voting to close as a duplicate because it was literally the exact same question asked by the same user only a short time before.