Robert Columbia's answer, which was written for an earlier version of this Meta question, provides good general advice about not deleting one's good duplicates. Aaron Hall's answer covers why this concrete case ultimately had a resolution different than what Robert suggested. For the sake of closure, I will expand a bit on the sequence of events that led to the situation being discussed here.
The target question was asked in October 2015. Its first, now deleted, duplicate (the one Robert discusses in his answer) was asked in May 2017. It is a highly non-obvious duplicate. Having read the target back in 2015, I recognised it was ultimately the same issue, and hammered one question against the other. In April 2018, I chanced upon the second duplicate, which is nearly identical but, since it was a highly non-obvious duplicate just the same, had gotten two good answers. I also hammered the second duplicate.
A few days ago, that set of questions resurfaced through this Meta question. I suggested to Damian that the first duplicate should be deleted as redundant, and he agreed. Since then, the question was undeleted by other users, and then finally deleted again, which should suffice to settle the matter.