I'm that said user. Thus, apologies if you think this was badly handled by me.
I've not immediately improved your draft. I've waited 30 minutes after the rejection (to give you more time to react) and then decided to improve the few parts which still were problematic. [I did not know whether you were planning to pursue it or not, thus took it into my own hands — it already were about 80 minutes since my initial comment.]
After all, most of the content was fine. I'd loved to be able to suggest a correction on your draft instead (see also Improving requested edits in Stack Overflow Documentation), but there's no such thing and the only way was to click improve, do the few changes I found missing and then submit it myself.
Also, on the change page https://stackoverflow.com/documentation/proposed/changes/47474 there is noted "This draft is based on another draft by Darren." as you see I've not just copied it all in my own new change, but it's actually built on yours. Just in the edit history of that topic your contribution isn't displayed anymore.
So, regarding the purpose of generating it themselves for the gain:
In general, I think the implementation of the documentation has to be blamed for this. When improving anothers change, it should still show up in the actual history of the topic, and not just in a loosely linked list of the drafts. That way you would get the main credit and I'd get as much credit as appropriate (depending on whether it's substantial or not).
I've created a feature-request for this: Give credit for authors of an original draft.