First and foremost, you should familiarize yourself with why Community will step in and review a post. You can read more in Why does the Community ♦ user approve and reject edits? but the short version is
- A reviewer either improves an edit, or rejects and replaces it with a different edit
- A user with full edit privileges saves an edit over yours
Your case is the first. When one of these situations occurs, an instant accept/reject action is required, so Community has been given special mod-like powers to handle the instant accept/reject cases. Anytime a review needs to be handled by the reviewers only without a typical 3 accept/reject votes, Community steps in and provides the "moderator" action.
That is the case now and has always been the case, but as Braiam points out, the specific implementation (in terms of the options available to the reviewer) is slightly different now than it was 3 years ago, although the general idea is the same.
To expand on the difference between what happened and what you expected to happen, and the history behind the changes Braiam mentioned, in the past there was a concept of a "minor edit". In fact there was an entire edit reject reason just for that called "Too Minor". If a reviewer felt an edit didn't do enough, they were welcome to reject the edit on those grounds. However, what constituted a "minor edit" was left to the determination of the individual reviewers. Some had a much higher threshold for minor than others.
And at that time, there was no "Reject and Edit" and "Improve Edit" buttons like you see now, there was just "Edit". When a reviewer decided that they wanted to edit the post while reviewing, they could click "Edit" and then would be able to edit the post, using the suggested edit as a starting point. There was actually no way to revert to the previous revision within the edit window itself without manually undoing the suggested edit.
And when the reviewer was done with the edit, they had the option of unchecking a box that said "the suggested edit was helpful" (it was checked by default). This essentially was the predecessor to both "Improve Edit" and "Reject and Edit".
- If the box was left checked, the edit was instantly approved, the suggested edit was applied, and then the improved edit was immediately applied as the current revision. The suggested editor's edit was part of the revision history of the post.
- If the box was unchecked, the edit was instantly rejected, and only the improved edit was applied to the post. The suggested editor's edit was not included in the revision history of the post at all.
For the specific edit, we can only guess why the reviewer chose to handle it as he did. Most likely the reviewer decided that your edit was incomplete (i.e the "too minor" case I mentioned above), and felt that your effort was not sufficient to approve the edit and provide you with the +2 rep. It doesn't matter if the diff today isn't reflecting what you actually changed. In the end the reviewer himself felt it wasn't sufficient to warrant leaving that "suggested edit was helpful" box checked. The only person that could really address why would be the reviewer and I doubt he could tell you given it happened 3 years ago.